This is a repeat of a post I published in 2013. I think it is worth posting again.
As you may know, I was born and raised in Houston, Texas.
I am third of eight children.
My parents were both Jewish, as am I.
Yet every year we celebrated Christmas.
Is this puzzling? It wasn’t at all puzzling to me and my siblings.
Every Christmas, the family bought a Christmas tree, and we all joined in decorating it with lights, ornaments, and tinsel.
Every Christmas morning, we woke up like a noisy tribe about five a.m. and rushed to discover that we all had presents under the tree.
Why did our Jewish family celebrate Christmas?
To begin with, my parents had been born into observant Jewish families. My father was born in Savannah, Georgia, where he was the youngest of nine children and the only boy. He was spoiled rotten, left high school without graduating, and tried (but failed) to make it in vaudeville as a hoofer and comedian. My mother was born in Bessarabia and came to America at the end of World War 1 as a nine-year-old girl with her mother and little sister. They traveled on a ship (the “Savoie”) loaded with returning American soldiers, then made their way to Houston to meet my grandfather, who was a tailor and had come to America before the war broke out.
What my parents wanted most was to be seen as “real Americans.” My mother was especially zealous about wanting to speak perfect English (she arrived speaking only Yiddish). She was very proud that she earned a high school diploma from the Houston public schools. In her eyes, real Americans celebrated Christmas. So, of course, we had a tree, and we believed that Santa Claus brought the presents. There was no religious content to our tree and our gifting.
We went to public school, where we learned all the Christmas songs. We went to assemblies and sang “Silent Night,” “Joy to the World,” “O Little Town of Bethlehem,” and all the other traditional songs. I knew I was Jewish, and I usually hummed certain words instead of saying them, but nonetheless I loved the songs and I love them still. I was never offended by singing Christmas songs at public school. It was what we did.
Of course, my siblings and I went to Sunday School at the synagogue, and my brothers were bar mitzvah. I was “confirmed,” which was a ceremony that occurred at the end of tenth grade, when we read from the prayer book as a group.
I should add that we started every day in public school with a short reading from the Bible, over the loudspeaker, followed by a prayer and the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance.
I was okay with the Bible reading, the prayers, the Christmas songs. I was also okay with our family putting up a Christmas tree while belonging to a synagogue and practicing our Jewish rituals and holy days.
I committed one major faux pas as a result of my upbringing in two religious traditions. On one occasion, when I was about 12, the rabbi at my reform temple invited me to join him on the altar and say a prayer. I said “The Lord’s Prayer,” the one that begins, “Our father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name” prayer, and there was some awkwardness afterwards. I had no idea that I was saying a Christian prayer, drawn from the Gospel of Matthew, in the synagogue! I had heard it hundreds of times in school. I think I was forgiven my error. After that, the rabbi was careful to propose a specific prayer from the prayer book for children who were invited to speak from the altar.
Many things have changed, and I understand that. But when I go with my partner to midnight Mass on Christmas Eve at the Oratory of St. Boniface in Brooklyn, I am glad I know the words to the songs. I learned them in public school in Houston. I look around and am not surprised to see a fairly large number of other Jews from the neighborhood, also joining in singing the songs with the choir. It is Christmas. It is a time to celebrate peace and joy and goodwill towards all. We can all share those hopes.

And we can pray that those who profess to be Christians would live their beliefs.
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Amen to that.
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Fine post. This time every year when i am around my fellow liberal intellectuals i’m always self conscious that i will say merry christmas and they’ll think i’m a bigot.
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I say “Merry Christmas” without embarrassment.
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I am not religious.
I’ve said “Merry Xmas” and “Happy Holidays” and a host of other greetings & replies [religious and secular] more times than I can count these last few weeks. To folks of every background and way of thinking.
I will continue doing so until the day I die.
dianeravitch: ¡Palante! [Forward!]
😎
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Thank you for this Diane. As a mixed-race, mixed-religion family, I have always found the melting pot aspect of our country lovely, cozy, and warm. May it always be so.
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Merry Christmas to you and yours. Thanks for the wonderful stories about growing up in Houston, my adopted hometown.
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When you originally posted this, Diane, I was on Internet hiatus. (I periodically unplug and avoid technology for a couple years at a time.) So until now, I had no idea our family histories had so much in common. From one Jew to another, Merry Christmas!
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Left Coast Teacher, I wish I were capable of unplugging.
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Diane, you graciously give of yourself without pause. I am always grateful to you, and always a little awestruck by you.
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Well said Dianne. I grew up the same as you and have learned what is behind what people are told.
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As for Christmas trees, they originated in Germany. They don’t have any religious significance, and they may be connected to winter solstice. They are actually from what was a pagan ritual. http://www.history.com/topics/christmas/history-of-christmas-trees
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I have similar memories of growing up in Youngstown, the difference being we did not have a tree but rather decorated our next door neighbor’s tree every year and scurried over Christmas morning to see what Santa left. I was in my high school choir as well as a smaller girls’ ensemble. The choir had a Christmas concert every year; the ensemble performed at various civic and private cites, singing holiday songs. I, too, love Christmas music and actually listen to it on the radio starting shortly after Thanksgiving.
My children have been lucky enough to follow that tradition here in Denver: when growing up we crossed the alley to our neighbors, decorated the tree, had Christmas Eve dinner, raced over to see Santa’s presents.
The most important lesson for me has and remains to be:
Do unto others as you would have others do unto thee. I remain perplexed why that is so difficult to achieve.
May the New Year bring us peace, health and happiness.
Jeannie Kaplan
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Jesus was never a Christian. He was a Jew. Stated simply, the Jewish view of Jesus of Nazareth is that he was an ordinary Jewish man and preacher living during the Roman occupation of the Holy Land in the first century C.E. The Romans executed him – and also executed many other nationalistic and religious Jews – for speaking out against Roman authority and abuses.
After his alleged death from crucifixion, Jesus became the focal point of a small Jewish religious movement that eventually evolved in the Christian faith.
It is also arguable that Christianity didn’t start with Jesus—instead Christianity had its real start decades later. Christianity developed out of Judaism in the 1st century C.E. under the leadership of the apostles. It is founded on the life, teachings, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, and those who follow him are called “Christians.”
In fact, that small Jewish movement led by the apostles who knew Christ first hand almost died out, but a great salesman called Paul, who didn’t know much about Christ and never met him, is the real founder of Christianity.
The Apostle Paul never met Jesus in the flesh. he only claimed some strange vision and proceeded to revise the teachings of Jesus (who preached an enlightened form of Judaism), until he created Pauline Christianity. Because there are no known writings from Jesus, the actual Apostles, or anyone that actually knew Him in the flesh (other then perhaps James), most of what He taught is lost forever.
The beginning of Christianity stands two figures: Jesus and Paul. Jesus is regarded by Christians as the founder of their religion, in that the events of his life comprise the foundation story of Christianity; but Paul is regarded as the great interpreter of Jesus’ mission, who explained, in a way that Jesus himself never did, how Jesus’ life and death fitted into a cosmic scheme of salvation, stretching from the creation of Adam to the end of time. The doctrines of Christianity come mostly from the teaching or influence of Paul.
Then there is the claim that Christ did not die on the cross. That he survived the crucifixion and fled to Kashmir where he married, had children, died of old age and is really buried. The first step in Christ’s trail after the Crucifixion is found in the Persian scholar F. Mohammed’s historical work “Jami-ut-tuwarik” which tells of Christ’s arrival in the kingdom of Nisibis, by royal invitation. (Nisibis is today known as Nusaybin in Turkey) . This is reiterated in the Imam Abu Jafar Muhammed’s “Tafsi-Ibn-i-Jamir at-tubri.” Kersten found that in both Turkey and Persia there are ancient stories of a saint called “Yuz Asaf” (“Leader of the Healed”), whose behaviour, miracles and teachings are remarkably similar to that of Christ.
But no matter what evidence there is, most Christians will dismiss anything that doesn’t fit what they were taught to believe, and Christmas and Easter will continue to be celebrated without question by most.
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Around the same time you were growing up in Houston, I learned Christmas and Hanukkah songs in a choir led by a Jewish principal in an elementary school in a Jewish neighborhood in Chicago. I love that I learned the words to these beautiful songs and still remember them.
In the neighborhood high school, the choir performed Handel exerpts from The Messiah and Judas Maccabeus. I did not know this until I was an adult and identified the music that I had heard chorus members practicing while they passed in the halls. To me, this is cultural education, a tradition I continued when I added songs from all the ethnic communities that I taught.
This reminds me of the wonderful arts-infused education that I received in the Chicago Public Schools. Sadly,that was a lifetime ago..
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I’m surprised that your Rabbi was a bit taken aback. As Lloyd pointed out, if the historical Jesus is represented in Matthew, he was a Jew and, certainly, one of the most famous. Furthermore, that prayer is as steeped in the Jewish tradition as any one I can imagine. Your choice was wonderful and inventive (maybe, unconsciously) and offered a ‘teaching moment’ to the Rabbi. He needed to pay more attention.
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Thank you Diane. It’s always wonderful to find others have had similar experiences growing up. My dad was Jewish and my mother raised Southern Baptist (‘never trust a white southern Baptist’). We had Christmas in the living room and Hanukah in the dining room in a California bungalow where both rooms were open to each other. But most of all I remember that I had fabulous ARTS EDUCATION in Los Angeles at the time – choir was taught by experts and we learned all the beautiful songs. I was an alto and I can still sing my part all these 53 years later. What a glorious tradition — music, trees, lights, and good food. I thought these were Pagan beliefs but I guess not. Perfect for a mutt.
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I live in a neighborhood in Southern California that is very diverse. Next door to me is a Christian women from the Dominican Republic who is married to a Jewish man from New York. A few doors down in a Jewish family from Brooklyn and across the street is a Muslim woman from Pakistan. My family is Catholic. On Christmas Eve we all celebrated “the holidays” together and had a great time. Although I didn’t say anything, I was thinking “This is the way it should be.”
“Let there be peace on earth and let it begin with me.”
Merry Christmas, Diane, and to all the people who post on your blog!
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Thank you for continuing to set the record straight. Your mother was a wise woman to see that what she found in US was better than what she left and wise enough to adapt to it rather than seek to destroy it.
Blanche Brick Professor of History Blinn College Bryan, Texas
Sent from my iPhone
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Blanche, my mother left a Europe torn by ethnic and religious hatred, persecution, and war. She never looked back. I think she said at least once a day, “Thank God for America.”
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LIKE!
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Lovely post. I. too, recited the Lord’s Prayer every morning in First Grade. I always enjoyed the poetic language, and certainly would have liked to have my trespasses forgiven. For some reason, I never really thought of the Lord’s Prayer as particularly Christian, and I can’t think of any of the language or sentiments that would be offensive to Jews. Given that Jesus, Matthew, and almost the entire audience were Jews, I suspect that the prayer that Jesus described to them was based on phrases and sentiments that were already well-know to his Jewish listeners
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Loved you share!
My mother was the daughter of Russian Jews. My father was the son a Catholic woman born here. Her mother, born here, and was a rabbi’s daughter, Her father emigrated from Spain to Cuba and then here. Grandma married an atheist of Jewish decent, whose mother was born here. My grandpa dressed as Santa for our Christmas every year. It was my favorite time of year. Grandma and I went to Radio City, ate at Shrafts, and watched the tree lighting every year at Rockefella Center.
My father was Bar Mitzvah, as was my brother. We celebrated Hanukah, too, with my Jewish grandparents. We were not confused as to what goodness meant. We always knew that something beyond our own mortal selves was guiding us.
My sons were Bar Mitzvah. One married a Catholic the other a Protestant.
This is America. God Bless us all!
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